Thursday, January 18, 2024

Thomas Ward on Tolkien and Moral Clarity

 

 Artwork by the Brothers Hildebrandt

JRR Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings was hugely influential in my early life, when I thought of it in secular terms as a pr-eminent work of fantasy.   As a scholar later in life, I came to appreciate Tolkien’s work a synthesis of early European myths combined with his own poetic sensibility.    As an older man and as a Christian, I’ve slowly come to appreciate the deep faith that undergirds his writing, something that is more elusive and yet perhaps more satisfying than the more accessible faith on display in C.S. Lewis’ Narnia books.

This week I’ve been thinking through a marvellous short essay by Thomas Ward, a professor of philosophy at Baylor.  Ward identifies a subtle disconnect between Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings books and the film adaptations by Peter Jackson, which, while widely (and, I think, rightly) acclaimed, a disconnect which involves our contemporary preference for flawed rather than exemplary characters.  

"Modern storytelling focuses on characters overcoming their own inner conflicts, even as they overcome the conflict that drives the main plot. There’s nothing wrong with this except when, as a kind of storytelling orthodoxy, it eradicates other compelling ways to depict character. Tolkien gave us a few characters who were simply excellent, not without grief or doubt but with no moral weaknesses to prevent them from acting well in the extremely difficult circumstances the book describes. Faramir, Aragorn, Gandalf, Treebeard, even poor Sam: in the films these are all less excellent than they really are.”

As a scholar of philosopher Boethius, Ward is well suited to understand Tolkien’s grand theme, that evil is always fundamentally weaker than good.  The characters in Tolkien who model the good best - Gandalf, Aragorn, Treebeard - possess a power that comes from their intrinsic virtue and from their mastery of fear and base emotion.  In the film, Gandalf quails before the Ringwraith, Aragorn kills Sauron’s spokesman with some sneaky swordplay, and Treebeard is a "doddering fool” who only does the right thing out of anger rather than out of moral choice.   As Ward notes, while these characters in th book are icons of virtue, in the films they become mirrors in which we see our own flaws.

"Again and Again, where the book gives us characters with extraordinary, exemplary goodness, the films change the story to make these characters less good. But while Jackson makes the best characters less good than they are in the book, he makes no evil character less bad than he is in the book.

What does it tell us about our own era that our villains can be thoroughly evil but our heroes can’t be thoroughly good? We’re weighed down by despair, and therefore prone to cynicism. We can recognize goodness when we see it, and we are attracted to it – this is why nearly all popular stories continue to make the good guys win – but we don’t really believe that the good is more powerful, more fundamental, than the bad. The bad is more basic, more real, than the good. So a villain need not be complicated by a tug toward the good (though plenty of villains are portrayed this way, appropriately so), but every hero must be conflicted."

My friend James, who is a much better Tolkien scholar than I am, agreed with Ward’s thesis and added his own observations about the difference between the Elves in the book and in the films:   “Tolkien’s elves are high minded, intellectual, deeply spiritual, alien but inherently good people but have been written over by Michael Moorcock;s Elric Saga and Dungeons and Dragons where elves are arrogant tropes for aristocracy and class warfare.  Which i why most people like the earthy, ‘working class’ dwarves over the ‘poncey’ elves."

Perhaps the prince we paid for the Jackson film adaptations was to have them reinterpreted according to the secular age, and perhaps too that was made possible by Tolkien’s famous aversion to allegory.   After all, Tolkien’s work has inspired people led people in directions - swords and sorcery fantasy games, ecology and counter culture - other than to a fulsome Christianity.   Other works would be more resistant to Jackson’s levelling of the moral playing field.   Could an adaptation of the Narnia stories be satisfying were Aslan to be flawed?   

As a person of faith, I need to reread Tolkien to remind myself of the moral clarity that Ward sees in him, and which was there all the time for those who value moral clarity and depictions of virtue.

 

6 comments:

Gene Packwood said...

Thank you.

tradgardmastare said...

A most interesting post and link to the article. Much to ponder upon…
Alan

joe5mc said...

Perhaps worth noting that two of the examples mentioned - Gandalf before the Nazgul and Aragorn killing the Mouth of Sauron only appear in the extended edition of The Return of the King. I actually think it is better to watch the theatrical version of that film (but the extended of the other two!). Faramir though - he done wrong!

James said...

Thank you for referring to me as a "Tolkien scholar"! Something I have, like Galadriel and the One Ring, long desired.
I'll try not to let my head swell too much!

Mad Padre said...

Thank you all for your comments and for reading.
James, you're a better JRRT scholar than I am. I may have a slight edge on you with CS Lewis.

joe5mc, thanks for your comments on the different versions of the Jackson films. I recall watching the extended versions avidly when the DVD's came out (remember them?) because, like a good nerd, I just wanted MORE. Some of the scenes I felt at the time were better cut, eg, the scene in TT when Aragorn can't finish the meal that Eowyn cooked for him. At the time it just felt a bit cringey, but I think it underscores the point of the essay, that Jackson can't resist humanizing all of Tolkien's characters, and maybe Eowyn would have been better left as a grim and fair shield maiden rather than a sitcom character.

James said...

Yes. Eowyn is a noble woman. She's got household staff to do the cooking.
Although, Aragorn, being a Ranger and used to rough food around a campfire, should just eat it.
But PJ has to insert some RomCom

Mad Padre

Mad Padre
Opinions expressed within are in no way the responsibility of anyone's employers or facilitating agencies and should by rights be taken as nothing more than one person's notional musings, attempted witticisms, and prayerful posturings.

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